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Xamarin Mobile Development for Android Cookbook

You're reading from   Xamarin Mobile Development for Android Cookbook Over 80 hands-on recipes to unleash full potential for Xamarin in development and monetization of feature-packed, real-world Android apps

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784398576
Length 456 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Matthew Leibowitz Matthew Leibowitz
Author Profile Icon Matthew Leibowitz
Matthew Leibowitz
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Working with Xamarin.Android FREE CHAPTER 2. Showing Views and Handling Fragments 3. Managing App Data 4. Presenting App Data 5. Communicating with the Outside World 6. Using Background Tasks 7. Notifying Users 8. Interacting with Other Apps 9. Presenting Multimedia 10. Responding to the User 11. Connecting to Wearables 12. Adding In-App Billing 13. Publishing Apps Index

Custom notification views


Sometimes notifications created by the builder just don't provide enough flexibility compared to what is required. Sometimes notifications created by the builder just don't provide enough flexibility or customization. As a result, an entirely custom notification layout is needed to provide this level of customization.

Getting ready

If we are going to support Android versions prior to 3.0, we will have to install the Xamarin Support Library v4 NuGet or component into our project.

How to do it...

We can use RemoteViews with a layout file to provide a custom layout for a notification:

  1. We can also display an entirely custom view in a notification. To do this, we create a RemoteViews object, passing the resource ID of the layout:

    var view = new RemoteViews(
      PackageName, Resource.Layout.NotificationLayout);
  2. We can then update the various sub views using the various setter methods, such as SetTextViewText(), SetProgressBar(), and SetImageViewResource():

    view.SetTextViewText...
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